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[personal profile] vaneramos
Yesterday leaving Toronto felt like tearing sinew, splashing blood. Talking in the front hall I knew I needed to say more, felt like I said too much. Always cautious, yes.

The road was a dark thread through a splendid tapestry. Took Guelph Line, like I have been doing lately. Les reminded me of that route when we drove to Montreal. Sideroad 20 passes high moraines. First I pulled off to capture the bright gold of goldenrod and spattered purple of asters against the broad yellow slopes of maturing soybeans. Two horses standing in a paddock stared at me. Once I got back in the car they put their heads down.

Something peculiar on the stereo: Kurt Weil's Symphony Number 2. He wrote it for a Polish noblewoman in Paris, while fleeing from the Nazis. It is harsh, like a dagger striking through the shower curtain, but I am compelled to hear this new thing.

Driving up Victoria Road I fall into a bed of treasure, more asters and goldenrod weighing down the valley bottoms. The dry stony hilltops are covered with frothy sprays of Aster ericoides. I get out, take pictures, then go in search of grey goldenrod, an unusual species that used to grow at Elmbrae. Meadows always make me think of that place, but never with sadness. My eyes are too full. I can't remember what grey goldenrod looks like, but it's tiny in this poor glacial effluvium. I want to look up geological web sites, try to remember exactly how moraines are formed; somehow rocks flow down the edge of a glacier, pushed by violent water.

Wading into the rampant lake of purple, gold and white, I am up to my hips now. Feel all this riotous colour leaching out the grey in my heart. All along the drive home I have felt the prickling potential for another panic attack: the longing, holding on, the hardness of pulling away from people I care about.

We are pack animals indeed. Think how hard it is to wake in the night when you're alone.

Remember the last night falling asleep, pressed against Danny's tailbone. I love that sense of potential, the weaving trails of desire, threads through our bodies. The simmering gradually subsides into sleep. Now he is shooting off to San Francisco like a rocket. Part of me goes with him today, pressed against the small of his back, a curious thought wandering, longing to see new places.

I would love to see Cameron right now, too.

But I am among asters and goldenrod, there is no better place to be alone, and I feel the beauty diffusing into me.

Leaving that splendid painting, like Monet gone mad with colour, I drive to Arkell Road, then turn aside to the east, drive up into the highest moraine here, looking for a certain place we used to stop. I was doing research for one of my profs, it must have been the summer with Dr. Reader. This wasn't our main project, so we only came here a few days. I remember parking by the road—I look for the spot—and walking onto the high stony crest, where dry meadows sprawled among old apple trees. We had little yellow ribbons in the grass to mark our test plots. What were we looking for? Now, driving along the road, I can't find the spot we parked.

Here is this huge, silent avalanche of small limestone rocks, sprawling upwards, pale as bones of the earth, like a whale carcass. Behemoths lie dead across the countryside, their neck bones forming sinuous ridges.

Turning back toward home, I pass the field where I photographed Brenna on a too-bright afternoon in May. My eyes smart in the sun of that memory. Today I'm under a heavy sky, warning of hurricanes, but none will come.

Saturday morning will dawn peerless blue. That's what Mom used to call it. I thought Peerless meant the name of the ice cream parlour where I would go sometimes after school. Mom would give me 25 cents for a cone.

Now I know peerless means matchless, beyond comparison. And today I'll enter that blue, walk underneath at the farmers market, tables decked on either side with autumnal abundance.


Date: 2004-09-18 08:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quillon.livejournal.com
Wow.. you just brought rural Ontario back to me in one post.

Very pretty shots.

Date: 2004-09-18 09:47 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
Oh good! The landscape here is flatter and more rolling than around Meirion and Rob's, but we get glacial moraines rising sharply from the countryside. Late summer is certainly one of the prettiest times to see wildflowers splashed across the meadows, and Nanookville is a scenic gem.

Date: 2004-09-18 08:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] quirkstreet.livejournal.com
Fantastic stuff. Have a wonderful weekend if we don't have time to catch up.

Date: 2004-09-18 09:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
Thanks, you too hon. :-)

Date: 2004-09-18 08:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] eloquentwthrage.livejournal.com
Were if only I still used desktop photos!

They were slowing down my old Dell considerably - it's a Pentium II for cryin' out loud! - so I don't use a desktop photo anymore. Alas and alack! I miss your subtle beauty peering back at me each morn ere the day begin.

(Can you tell I'm studying Shakespeare?)

Date: 2004-09-18 09:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
At least you can still have flowery speech.

Date: 2004-09-18 10:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] handlebear.livejournal.com
I'd love to see you too Van. I'll take care of Danny next weekend for you.

Date: 2004-09-18 10:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
Thank you, I hope he has plenty of fun! :-)

I got here ok, be talking with ya soon!

Date: 2004-09-19 07:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] djjo.livejournal.com
Can't believe I'm up so early, but my body just says MOVE. Gonna get some coffee soon though. HugsQ!

Re: I got here ok, be talking with ya soon!

Date: 2004-09-19 07:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
Hi! Sorry I missed your call. I was home by then, but I did go watch Exotica with Jon last evening. We talked apartments, too. It looks like we should be able to afford a townhouse or a floor of a house. We're planning to go look at a couple places on Monday. Stay well, have fun, and we'll talk soon.
(deleted comment)

Date: 2004-09-18 12:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
Thanks Ian. I used to dread autumn, but September's beauty is working its way into my heart. The colour has a particular richness, counterpoint to the freshness of spring.

Beautiful pictures for a grey day

Date: 2004-09-19 07:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] djjo.livejournal.com
It's cloudy and rained earlier. I'm on the 19th floor, so i can see accross a good section of city and I'm watching the clouds in their many grey / black shades roll across the sky. Pretty in it's own way, but more low key.

waiting for / wanting your spooning
waiting for / wanting your breath on my neck

sweet smiles at the memory, a glow of anticipation

Good morning sweatheart, keep well and I'll be home soon.
Danny

Re: Beautiful pictures for a grey day

Date: 2004-09-19 09:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vaneramos.livejournal.com
You are a poet, too, honey cub. Sweet morning hugs and kisses.

Love,
me
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